The Rock Still Reigns With Scorpion King, Spider-Man Looms

LOS ANGELES – The Scorpion King ruled the box office for a second straight weekend with $17.6 million, but its reign is about to end with the arrival of another hero that's part man, part bug.

One of the most hotly awaited comic-book adaptations ever, Spider-Man opens next weekend and is expected to put an early spin on the summer blockbuster season.

"This is one of the most anticipated movies of the year," said Paul Dergarabedian, president of box-office tracker Exhibitor Relations. "It's a total summer movie. It's exactly what people want in summer."

Scorpion King distributor Universal wisely chose to slip its action flick into the lineup two weeks ahead of Spider-Man. Starring pro wrestler The Rock in a spinoff of The Mummy franchise, The Scorpion King debuted with $36.1 million last weekend, a record for a film opening in April.

The movie has taken in $60.8 million in its first 10 days.

"We gave ourselves two full weeks with a lot of visibility and no real competition out there," said Nikki Rocco, head of distribution for Universal. "It turns out to have been a very successful strategy."

The thriller Changing Lanes held the No. 2 spot for the second straight weekend with $9 million, pushing its 17-day total to $44.6 million.

This weekend's main new films had weak debuts.

The romantic comedy Life or Something Like It, starring Angelina Jolie as a shallow TV journalist coping with a street soothsayer's prediction that she's about to die, opened in third place with $6.65 million.

Jason X, a sci-fi update of the Friday the 13th horror franchise, premiered at No. 4 with $6.5 million.

Playing in 2,606 theaters, Life or Something Like It averaged an anemic $2,552 a cinema, compared with $5,103 in 3,449 theaters for The Scorpion King. Jason X averaged $3,461 in 1,878 theaters.

Box-office receipts for slasher films tend to tumble steeply after opening weekend because the hardcore horror crowd already has come and gone. Life or Something Like It might hold up better because its largely female audience gave it good grades and competition is scarce for movies about women, said Rick Myerson, general sales manager for 20th Century Fox, which distributed the film.

The overall box-office rose for the 11th straight weekend. The top 12 movies grossed $69.8 million, up 27 percent from the same weekend last year.

Domestic movie revenues are running 15 to 16 percent ahead of the pace last year, when Hollywood had a record annual total of $8.4 billion.